Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Latter-day Saints official: Boy Scouts left us

- GARY FIELDS AND BRADY MCCOMBS

NEW YORK — A high-ranking leader with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints said Friday that the church severed its century-long tie with the Boy Scouts of America because the organizati­on made changes that pushed it away from the church.

“The reality there is we didn’t really leave them; they kind of left us,” said M. Russell Ballard, a member of a top governing panel of the church called the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. “The direction they were going was not consistent to what we feel our youth need to have … to survive in the world that lies ahead for them.”

Ballard is in New York City to lead events with young adult church members and talk about preparatio­ns for the faith’s bicentenni­al next April.

During an interview, he talked about topics as diverse as the church’s support for medical marijuana, incivility in daily life and political discord.

The Latter-day Saints decided in 2018 to cut ties with the Boy Scouts of America and begin its own youth initiative in 2020 after declining membership prompted the Boy Scouts of America to open its doors to openly gay youth members and adult volunteers as well as girls and transgende­r youth.

At the time of the announceme­nt, church leaders emphasized the desire to have a uniform scouting-like program that it could use around the world and didn’t mention any philosophi­cal difference­s.

The church — while moving to be more empathetic toward gay and transgende­r members — has maintained its stance that being in a homosexual relationsh­ip is a sin and its opposition to same-sex marriage. The church also has seen significan­t expansion in countries outside the U.S. where Boy Scouts wasn’t offered. More than half of the church’s nearly 17 million members live outside the U.S. and Canada.

In another area, Ballard said the church supports medical marijuana but cautioned that its use be monitored. Medical marijuana became legal this year in the faith’s home state of Utah, where the faith has 2.1 million members. It’s also been legal for several years in Arizona, where 432,000 church members live.

“We think this ought to be managed under the medical profession and understand the real need and the real purpose for administer­ing marijuana medically,” he said, “but recreation­al marijuana, we think has consequenc­es — because addiction, one way or another, starts very subtle sometimes.”

Ballard, 91, is the acting president of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, which is modeled after Jesus Christ’s apostles and serves under the church president and his two counselors to help set policy and manage church programs. Ballard is a Utah native who has been on the top governing panel for 34 years.

In response to a question on the church’s tenet on kindness, Ballard said the country’s behavior needs to improve.

“We ought to be nice to each other,” he said.

The people should pray that the leaders of this country feel the urgency and importance of turning in a divine direction, Ballard said.

“Surely if there was a time that we need it with all the things that are going on in the country and the world, wouldn’t it be nice if we asked heaven to help us a little bit?” he asked.

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